Weโve all seen films about hitmen before. Hell, just a few months ago, Netflix released a movie called Hit Man, and it proved to be a big success. These contract killers have been a cinematic mainstay for decades, so at first blush, it might not seem wise to make an entire anthology film about them. After all, how many different stories can you tell about a guy hired to commit murder? Well according to the Fantasia plot synopsis for The Killers, a lot. It intrigued the hell out of me when I first read it, so I just had to give this movie a watch and see what the hype was all about.
The Killers was written and directed by Kim Jong-kwan, Roh Deok, Chang Hang-jun, and Lee Myung-Se, and it stars a huge cast that includes Shim Eun-kyung, Yeon Woo-jin, Hong Xa-bin, Oh Yeon-a, and Ko Chang-seok. The film is composed of four unconnected stories about hired killers, and each one puts its own unique spin on the hitman genre.
The Killers starts off with โMetamorphosis,โ a vampire story about a man who manages to escape a group of thugs sent to kill him. This is the only genuine horror segment in the movie, but itโs not just a straight up spookfest. It actually starts off as a slow-burn noir thriller with just a hint of horror, and soon afterwards, it turns into a pseudo-mystery that manages to keep your eyes glued to the screen even though you know exactly whatโs going on.
Then, in the final few minutes, โMetamorphosisโ finally goes all-in on its bloodsucking premise, and it does not disappoint. The ending is admittedly rather predictable, but surprisingly, thatโs not a problem. It wraps up the hitmenโs story in the best and most satisfying way possible, so youโll barely even notice the lack of originality.
Next up, The Killers gives us โContractors,โ a tale about three contract killers whoโve been tasked with taking out a college professor. At first, this segment seems to follow a fairly standard (albeit exaggerated) genre blueprint, but soon enough, youโll realize that the story is unlike anything youโve ever seen before.
I donโt want to spoil anything, but suffice it to say that these hired guns run into a few problems before they can finish the job, and from there, โContractorsโ takes a couple of narrative twists and turns you never wouldโve expected. Itโs a moral and intellectual wild goose chase thatโs way more fascinating than it has any right to be, so you wonโt be able to look away as these not-quite-heartless killers grapple with the job theyโve been given.

The second half of The Killers starts with a story called โEveryone Is Waiting for the Man,โ and this is hands down the best segment in the film. Itโs about a cop and a pair of professional hitmen who unexpectedly meet up at a restaurant as they wait for a notorious killer named Yum Sang-gu, but nobody in the place knows what this guy looks likeโฆ or do they?
Itโs a super intriguing premise thatโs executed nearly to perfection, so when the tension in this restaurant reaches a boiling point, it doesnโt let up until the big reveal. Iโm obviously not going to tell you what that reveal is, but I can say that it leads to a blood-soaked conclusion thatโs worth the price of admission. This is the closest The Killers gets to horror after โMetamorphosis,โ and while itโs still more action thriller than horror, itโs violent enough that genre fans are going to love it.
Last but not least, we have โDiaspora City,โ a story about two mysterious men whoโve arrived at a diner to kill a guy who eats there every day at 6 PM sharp. Much like โMetamorphosis,โ this segment has a pretty strong noir feel to it, and it also adds a hint of fantasy and what I can only guess is supposed to be comedy.
But unfortunately, that mix didnโt work for me at all. Most notably, the attempts at humor didnโt make me laugh or even smile a single time, and the fantasy element simply feels weird and out of place. Itโs almost like โDiaspora Cityโ is going for a surrealist, somewhat Lynchian tone, but it just comes across as scattered and borderline incoherent.
Granted, I was able to follow the general gist of the story, but a lot of the details feel like they donโt belong. To take just one example, a few other odd people enter this diner as well, and they donโt seem to serve any purpose other than making the segment even stranger. It feels like weirdness for weirdnessโs sake, and that makes for a disappointingly weak conclusion to this otherwise awesome anthology.
For some people, a single bad segment like that, especially coming at the end of the film, can ruin an anthology, but I disagree. Sure, The Killers has a weak closing story, but it also has three good ones, and thatโs a win in my book. So if this movie comes to a theater or VOD platform near you sometime in the future, you should definitely give it a watch. On the whole, itโs a super inventive and super intriguing genre-bending exploration of just how far you can take the hitman trope, and I had an absolute blast seeing the different spins these filmmakers put on that classic character.


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